The IRS & DOJ still can’t talk about Tax Code § 83 -
Montelepre Systemed, Inc. v. C.I.R., 956 F.2d 496, 498 at [1] (CA5 1992): "Section 83(a) explains how property received in exchange for
services is taxed."
Gudmundsson v. US, 634 F.3d 212 (CA2 2011): "At the heart of this case is I.R.C. § 83, which governs the taxation of property transferred in connection with the performance of services."
"Section 83 provides for the determination of the amount to be included in gross income and the timing of the inclusion when property is transferred to an employee or independent contractor in connection with the performance of services." (See IRS Revenue Ruling 2007-19, IRS' Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure & Administration), Administrative Provisions and Judicial Practice Division,
2007)."
IRS Officer, Sue Besson, 20 yrs. on the job who performed over 500 investigations, on the stand in the tax evasion trial of Raymond Gebauer, August of 2007: "I am unfamiliar with § 83."
"David, I have
read, studied and researched Section 83 in alignment with your information. I tried to disprove it, but failed. It is an excellent work."
Ron MacDonald (June 7, 2016) Author of "They Own It All"
"By far the most prolific source of research on this topic (the Tax Code) is David Myrland." Sovereignty Education
and Defense Ministry (SEDM.org, Chris Hansen, aka The Family Guardian).
“David’s a diligent student of the law. This is important
information, it has constitutional significance.”
Criminal tax defense attorney Larry Becraft, August 2, 2017
This is your only source for information about Tax Code § 83!
Code Breaker; The § 83 Equation -
This is a manual that explores the language of the statute itself, and details the basics essential to the proper interpretation and application of the statute. There's nothing more to know about how § 83 operates, and only David R. Myrland can claim to have known about this as early as 1994 when the first edition of this manual was written. This revised edition was updated in
March of 2014.
The IRS says your whole paycheck is gross income while § 83 says that only the "excess over the amount paid" is gross income. Can you reconcile how the IRS can keep this statute a secret? What is the IRS hiding from? Can the IRS just do that with the law? Have you ever owed an income tax? This manual is the first and last word on Tax Code § 83.
Code Breaker; The § 83 Equation
$24.95 plus shipping
Can the DOJ and IRS simply keep this statute a secret?
"The taxpayers were entitled to know the basis of law and
fact on which the Commissioner sought to sustain the deficiencies." (See Helvering v. Tex-Penn Oil Co., 300 U.S. 481, 498 (1937)).
What we're told vs. What we actually owe - Discover the truth today!
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